The Asian Age

More than food on menu at city’s 1st queer cafe

- RAJAN SHARMA

The capital’s heritage Mehrauli zone, home to many a hip bar and designer store, is where Sambhav Sharma decided to locate Q Café, Delhi’s first LGBTQ restaurant that provides food, drink — and sustenance — for the city’s queer community.

With the Qutub Minar providing the perfect backdrop, Q Café hopes to provide a safe haven for those who fall outside the manwoman binary and struggle to find spaces accepting of their ‘other’ status.

It started in October when Delhi-based queer rights activist Sharma tied up with Chez Jerome, an expert in French and Indian cuisines.

The French chef later stepped down and handed the reins of control to Mr Sharma and his Italian partner Roberto.

For Mr Sharma running the cafe comes with a responsibi­lity.

“I have to make sure that this cafe is not specifical­ly for gay men because they already have many spaces in the city where they can hang out. They are dominating queer spaces all around the city,” he said.

With a small dance floor under an open sky and seating for around 30 people, the cafe usually opens in the evening.

The menu, inspired by French, Greek and Italian cuisines, could compete with any eatery in the city. On offer are a variety of salads, omelettes, pastas as well as thin crust pizzas with traditiona­l toppings and dips.

Specialtie­s of the house include Greek chicken potato salad, a delicate mix of potatoes, onions, tomatoes and chicken salami, Parisian salad dressed with fresh lettuce and fresh parmesan and freshly baked breads.

But it’s not all about food.

With events like book reading sessions and trans nights, Mr Sharma wants to sensitise his customers about queer rights beyond Section 377 — the IPC section that criminalis­es sexual acts “against the order of nature”.

“Obviously, the cafe is not any NGO but it also not a place where people should only come to enjoy. I want to utilise this space to revolution­ise the struggle we are going through in India. The transgende­rs, lesbians and hijra folks of our community need more such spaces,” said Mr Sharma.

Despite falling under the broader queer umbrella, gay men stand out from others in the trans community. As a result, transgende­rs don’t feel safe even in those places where they should be welcome, he said.

 ?? — PTI ?? Watermelon mojito (a speciality) at Q cafe in Mehrauli.
— PTI Watermelon mojito (a speciality) at Q cafe in Mehrauli.

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